The action was removed from the state court. The present motion is by the plaintiff to remand it.
The action was brought in the New York Supreme Court. The complaint alleged that the plaintiff was a resident of New York and the defendant an Ohio corporation ; that the plaintiff’s predecessor had adopted the trademark “Smiles” for soap and had caused it to be registered in the Patent Office; that the trademark was the property of the plaintiff by assignment and was “of great value”; that the defendant as well as a predecessor whose liabilities it had assumed ha"d used the trademark on soap in large quantities throughout the United States continuously since 1920, in violation of the plaintiff’s registered trademark and to her irreparable loss and damage. As relief the plaintiff demanded an injunction, an accounting of profits and damages both treble and punitive.
The defendant seasonably filed petition and bond for removal. The petition set forth that there was diversity of citizenship, the plaintiff being a citizen of New York and the defendant a citizen of Ohio, and that the matter in controversy exceeded $3,000, exclusive of interest and costs. In an accompanying affidavit the defendant’s attorney stated that the case was one in which the federal court would have original jurisdiction, because' it was between citizens of different states and also because it was founded on the United States trademark laws. The state court after hearing argument granted removal.
After the case reached this court the plaintiff filed an amended complaint. The amended complaint is much the same as the original, but in it the plaintiff makes the effort to state a cause of action not cognizable in this court. She still pleads her ownership of the trademark “Smiles” for soap and the registration of it in the Patent Office, and she pleads the infringement of it by the defendant. But stress is laid on unfair competition, and in the prayer for relief she demands profits and damages “in the aggregate sum of $3,000,” as well as an injunction. Promptly after filing the amended complaint the plaintiff brought a motion to remand the case to the state court. Her position is that the case was not originally removable, and that even if it were the filing of the amended complaint requires remand at the present time.
1. The case was clearly removable for diversity of citizenship at the time when the defendant filed the petition for removal. In removal for diversity of citizenship it must appear that the matter in controversy exceeds $3,000, exclusive of interest and costs. The complaint did not set any specific figure as the amount in controversy. The petition for removal, however, contained the averment' that the matter in controversy exceeded $3,000, exclusive of interest and costs, and this averment was certainly not contradicted by the contents of the complaint, where it was said that the plaintiff’s trademark was of great value and that the defendant’s widespread and long-continued infringement had caused irreparable damage and where an injunction and damages, treble and punitive, were prayed for. Where the complaint has no direct allegation on the amount involved, the statement in the petition for removal that the matter involves more than the jurisdictional minimum, when supported by necessary inferences from the complaint, is controlling. Duff v. Hildreth,
The case was properly removed on the further ground that it was a suit for infringement of a trademark registered under the United States Trademark Act, and this irrespective of the amount involved. By section 17 of the Act (15 U.S.C.A. § 97), the district court is given original jurisdiction “of all suits at law or in equity respecting trade-marks registered in accordance with the provisions of this subdivision of this chapter, arising there
2. The plaintiff’s effort to force a remand to the state court through service of an amended complaint was futile. The law is settled that after a suit has been properly removed for diversity of citizenship and existence of a controversy involving more than $3,000, the plaintiff cannot bring about a remand by voluntary reduction of the amount claimed to less than the jurisdictional minimum. Kanouse v. Martin,
The provision in section 37 of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C.A. § 80, that “if in any suit * * * removed from a State court to a district court of the United States, it shall appear to the satisfaction of the said district court, at any time after such suit has been * * * removed thereto, that such suit does not really and substantially involve a dispute or controversy properly within the jurisdiction of said district court, * * * the said district court shall proceed no further therein, but shall * . * * remand it to the court from which it was removed,” has not been applied to cases of the present type, St. Paul Mercury Indemnity Co. v. Red Cab Co.,
The plaintiff relies on Fischer v. Star Co., D.C.,
While it is thus clear that the amended complaint properly plays no part in the motion to remand, it is worth noting that despite the plaintiff’s effort the amendment still shows a removable controversy. The prayer for relief in the amended complaint, profits and damages of $3,000 for the past and an injunction to protect for the future a trademark of great value from irreparable injury, proves that the amount in controversy is still more than $3,000, exclusive of interest and costs. The trademark for the future is worth something. Ayers v. Watson,
The motion to remand the case to the state court is lacking in merit and will be denied.
